Educating the Workforce of Tomorrow Fall 2017 - Page 10
Work-Based Learning – Empowering Low-Income Students In Hamilton County
The Chattanooga Public Education Foundation, in partnership with the Chattanooga Area Chamber of Commerce, the
Benwood Foundation, and the Hamilton County school district launched a work-based learning program to address
a stark disconnect between the labor supply and needs of local employers. STEP-UP Chattanooga connects low-
income students with businesses, nonprofits, and government agencies that provide internship opportunities for career
exploration and training. Modeled on the STEP-UP Achieve program in Minneapolis, Minnesota, STEP-UP Chattanooga
helped 76 students attain internships at 43 top Chattanooga companies in 2016. Compensated for their work, these
students gain on-the-job experience and professional skill building, and meet professionals who support their career
and postsecondary goals.
Early Remediation – Proactive Student Supports
Through a set of key interventions, Tennessee is taking a proactive and innovative approach to ensure students
are prepared for the rigors of postsecondary coursework.
Developed in 2012 through a partnership between K-12 and postsecondary educators in Chattanooga, the
Seamless Alignment and Integrated Learning Support (SAILS) system reduces college-level remediation in math
and English. Using a blended-learning format of both online and face-to-face instruction, SAILS helps students
who have not yet reached postsecondary readiness benchmarks on the ACT by providing targeted learning
supports in the high school senior year.
In 2013, the SAILS Math program launched statewide and since has shown enormous growth in both scale and
impact with more than 240 schools and 13,000 students participating in 2016. [21] Student completion rates of
SAILS math are above 90 percent, and the number of first-year college students needing math remediation has
shrunk by 15.6 percent over the same period of the program’s growth.
In the 2015-16 school year, the SAILS English program launched as a pilot program involving 104 students at
five high schools, with 98 percent of students completing the program. In 2016-17, the pilot program expanded
to 424 students at nineteen high schools.
EDUCATING THE WORKFORCE OF TOMORROW
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Postsecondary And Career Readiness In Tennessee